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Subject:
From:
Haruna Darbo <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 15 Jul 2008 15:06:37 EDT
Content-Type:
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What a professionally organised syndicate Laye. Tahnks for sharing. It is  
interesting how it all coincided with Koroma's visit to Gambia. I will be  
heading to arrest the owner of the Jeep dealership in Town. There couldn't be  many 
Jeep dealerships at this time in Freetown. 
 
Haruna.
I encourage you to Goodsearch for The GLobal Democracy  Project
Raise funds for your favourite charity by using _www.goodsearch.com_ 
(http://www.goodsearch.com/)  - powered by  Yahoo
 
In a message dated 7/15/2008 7:32:37 A.M. Mountain Daylight Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:

From  Awareness Times Newspaper in Freetown

Breaking News
Cocaine Plane  Impersonated the Red Cross:We have Lots of Exclusive Scoops
Inside this  Edition including the hitherto unknown Cocaine Speedboat...!
By
Jul 15,  2008, 11:08

*

48 hours on, mystery still surrounds the sudden  appearance of an
unidentified airplane at the tarmac of the Lungi  International Airport. In
the ensuing is a comprehensive report as filed in  by our Internet
correspondents and our local reporters.

The Plane with the fake Red Cross symbol on its wing and a  fake
registration number of SQ2261 painted on its side
*

At about  3:30 a.m. of Sunday 13th July 2008 a small jet plane with a fake
Red Cross  Sign is said to have forced its way onto the tarmac of the  Lungi
International Airport allegedly without the permission of the Control  Tower.
The plane was later identified as a Venezuelan registered  aircraft.
*

RED CROSS DISOWNS PLANE
*

In an exclusive  interview with the ICRC's Communications Head, Abu Bakarr
Kamara, he told  this press that the ICRC is downrightly dismayed over the
incident at Lungi  and would want the general public and the world to know
that the plane in  question is not owed by the ICRC nor by the Sierra Leone
Red Cross Society  (SLRCS).
*

APC MINISTER IMPLICATED
*

Meanwhile, in a  disturbing twist, the names of both Transport & Aviation
Minister Hon.  Kemoh Sesay and his younger brother Ahmed Sesay (who is the
Team Manager of  the National Football Team, Leone Stars) are being floated
as having some  knowledge of the drugs dealing. Unconfirmed information as we
went to press  is that Ahmed Sesay is being detained for questioning at the
Police's  CID.
*

FORCED LANDING?
*

According to police sources, the  plane allegedly landed far away from the
main terminal building in an area  known as Runway 3.0 at Kasongna Gate.
Immediately the plane landed, the  crew members allegedly disembarked and
boarded a waiting black jeep which  then forced its way out of the Airport by
breaking a sealed gate in the  airport perimeter and driving through it.

Security personnel were then  alerted who later forced the plane open and
found 703.5kg of Cocaine  inside. When the police mounted a cordon search of
the airport perimeter  area, they discovered five AK47 rifles in the
possession of an ex combatant  named Ibrahim Kargbo.
*

100 MILLION DOLLARS
*

According to  the United States Drug Enforcement Agency, a single gram of
pure cocaine  was selling for around $140 last September 2007. Thus, the
street value of  the 703kg of Cocaine that landed at Lungi Airport last
Sunday is almost  $100,000,000 (One Hundred Million Dollars). This is a clear
indication that  the operation is not a small one but one in which very
senior members of  the Government and Security Agencies might be giving their
blessings  to.

"There is no way an international drug dealer is going to risk a  cache worth
100 million dollars landing into a country where he does not  have some
serious high level connections and protection," a retired  Police
Commissioner told Awareness Times. *DISAPPEARANCE OF ONE  BOX
*

Strengthening these allegations is the fact that after the  boxes had been
offloaded from the plane, one of the boxes of cocaine simply  disappeared
from right under the noses of the security  personnel.
*

VENEZUELA TO SALONE
*

Just a fortnight ago,  Investigative Journalist David Blair in Caracas,
published in the Telegraph  Newspaper in London that a crucial change in the
global pattern of  narcotics smuggling is now underway.

According to Blair, in the past,  most narcotics from Columbia were smuggled
directly to Europe but today the  cocaine is more likely to be loaded onto
long-range aircraft and flown  across the Atlantic to small West African
countries. Blair particularly  cited Guinea-Bissau, Senegal and Sierra Leone,
as key transit points where  the cocaine is offloaded before being shipped
into  Europe.

Venezuela's President Chavez is accused of fully backing these  operations.
In 1998 - the last year before Mr. Chavez came to office -  Venezuela's
security forces made 11,581 drug-related arrests. By 2005, this  had
plummeted to only 1,082. It is also reported that last June 2007,  four
smugglers were arrested at the main airport on Venezuela's Margarita  Island
while loading 2.2 tons of cocaine onto an aircraft bound for Sierra  Leone.
They did not expect to be caught because senior security operatives  had
escorted them into the airport in Venezuela.
*

UMARU SITTA  TURAY
*

It will be recalled that local journalist Umaru Sitta Turay  had last year
June 2007 strongly protested at a Police Briefing that he had  been an eye
witness to a mystery helicopter that landed at the Choithram's  Hospital's
Helicopter Pad from which it had offloaded strange items for  well over two
hours. Sitta Turay had blasted the Police that despite him  making numerous
calls for the police to investigate the mystery scene, not  a single police
officer had turned up at the scene. According to Sitta  Turay, Hon. Kemoh
Sesay and his younger brother, Ahmed Sesay had been  present during the
offloading of this mystery helicopter at Hill Station  last June 2007 but the
police turned a blind eye back  then.
*

INVESTIGATION ORDERED
*

Meanwhile, President  Koroma and his entourage landed at the Airport from an
official visit to  the Gambia few hours after the incident. The President
upon arrival  reportedly instructed that the investigation should be jointly
conducted by  the local United Nations Mission and the Sierra Leone  Police
(SLP).

The immediate investigation set up is being headed on  the side of the SLP by
Assistant Inspector General Francis Munu under whose  tireless leadership,
arrests were effected that same Sunday. Initially,  three of the suspects
were arrested and the other three were apparently  later intercepted in the
Port Loko area. According to police sources, the  arrested Crew constituted
two Mexicans, one American, one Venezuelan, two  Colombians and one Bissau
Guinean.

Sierra Leoneans presently helping  the police in their investigations are
Chernor Bah, an air traffic  controller; Santos Bangura, Acting LUC Lungi
Airport Police Station; O.C.  Hazeley also of the Lungi Police Station;
Acting Managing Director Lungi  International Airport, Mr. John Brima and
John Sesay, Acting Operations  Manager.
*

'COCAINE SPEEDBOAT'
*

Special Investigations by  Awareness Times has revealed that at around 1:30am
(two hours before the  plane forcibly landed at the airport), a mystery
speedboat had crossed over  from Freetown into Lungi environs. The speedboat
which contained six men  (Four white men and two Nigerians) missed its
desired target which we have  learnt was the Landing Pad at Lungi Mahera used
by the Diamond Hovercraft.  Awareness Times interviewed a fisherman who
explained that his colleagues  and himself were awoken by the sound of the
speedboat which had berthed a  distance from the Hovercraft Pad. These
passengers explained they were lost  and requested for assistance. Speaking
in Krio, the fisherman told  Awareness Times that after they were each paid
ten thousand leones, they  took the speedboat to land at the Hovercraft site.
He reveals that they met  a brand new jeep parked at the site in the pitch
darkness and with two  white males sitting waiting. One male was described as
"very  hefty".

The fisherman's story was also corroborated by a driver of the  Hovercraft
Bus which usually transports passengers from the landing pad to  the airport.
The driver, Ibrahim Kamara, explained that his house was near  the landing
pad and he heard the sound of the speedboat at around 1:30am.  Ibrahim said
he was curious as the Hovercraft had finished operations for  that day and so
he came out of his house and met local fishermen who had  brought the
Nigerians and White men over in the lost  speedboat.

Another eye witness to the scene is a local handyman named  Brima Bah who
also confirmed to this newspaper's investigators that he was  woken up by the
sound of the speedboat and came outside to see a brand new  jeep with plastic
still covered on its seats, parked at the Hovercraft  landing pad.

"I helped some of the strangers off the speedboat and they  all got into the
jeep and drove off in the direction of the airport. It was  not yet 2am but
it was past 1am," Bah explained to Awareness Times adding  that he was given
Le10,000 for his assistance.
*

NIGERIAN WITH  €11,000
*

Meanwhile, a Nigerian national known as Ofodilay Chicozee  Chikeluba was
arrested by the police on suspicion of being part of the drug  plane saga.
According to the police, the Nigerian was in possession of  11,000 Euros
suspected to be for use in the operation. However, whilst in  police custody
(Chicozee), a Detective Police Constable, Musa Lansana who  was in charge of
the suspect was seen in the company of the suspect in a  restaurant in town.
Police have however re-arrested the suspect and Officer  Lansana has also
been detained for further investigations.


(c)  Copyright 2005, Freetown, Sierra  Leone.

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!



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